/*-------------------------------------------------------------------------
 *
 * numutils.c
 *      utility functions for I/O of built-in numeric types.
 *
 * Portions Copyright (c) 1996-2017, PostgreSQL Global Development Group
 * Portions Copyright (c) 1994, Regents of the University of California
 *
 *
 * IDENTIFICATION
 *      src/backend/utils/adt/numutils.c
 *
 *-------------------------------------------------------------------------
 */
#include "postgres.h"

#include <math.h>
#include <limits.h>
#include <ctype.h>

#include "utils/builtins.h"

/*
 * pg_atoi: convert string to integer
 *
 * allows any number of leading or trailing whitespace characters.
 *
 * 'size' is the sizeof() the desired integral result (1, 2, or 4 bytes).
 *
 * c, if not 0, is a terminator character that may appear after the
 * integer (plus whitespace).  If 0, the string must end after the integer.
 *
 * Unlike plain atoi(), this will throw ereport() upon bad input format or
 * overflow.
 */
int32
pg_atoi(const char *s, int size, int c)
{// #lizard forgives
    long        l;
    char       *badp;

    /*
     * Some versions of strtol treat the empty string as an error, but some
     * seem not to.  Make an explicit test to be sure we catch it.
     */
    if (s == NULL)
        elog(ERROR, "NULL pointer");
    if (*s == 0)
        ereport(ERROR,
                (errcode(ERRCODE_INVALID_TEXT_REPRESENTATION),
                 errmsg("invalid input syntax for %s: \"%s\"",
                        "integer", s)));

    errno = 0;
    l = strtol(s, &badp, 10);

    /* We made no progress parsing the string, so bail out */
    if (s == badp)
        ereport(ERROR,
                (errcode(ERRCODE_INVALID_TEXT_REPRESENTATION),
                 errmsg("invalid input syntax for %s: \"%s\"",
                        "integer", s)));

    switch (size)
    {
        case sizeof(int32):
            if (errno == ERANGE
#if defined(HAVE_LONG_INT_64)
            /* won't get ERANGE on these with 64-bit longs... */
                || l < INT_MIN || l > INT_MAX
#endif
                )
                ereport(ERROR,
                        (errcode(ERRCODE_NUMERIC_VALUE_OUT_OF_RANGE),
                         errmsg("value \"%s\" is out of range for type %s", s,
                                "integer")));
            break;
        case sizeof(int16):
            if (errno == ERANGE || l < SHRT_MIN || l > SHRT_MAX)
                ereport(ERROR,
                        (errcode(ERRCODE_NUMERIC_VALUE_OUT_OF_RANGE),
                         errmsg("value \"%s\" is out of range for type %s", s,
                                "smallint")));
            break;
        case sizeof(int8):
            if (errno == ERANGE || l < SCHAR_MIN || l > SCHAR_MAX)
                ereport(ERROR,
                        (errcode(ERRCODE_NUMERIC_VALUE_OUT_OF_RANGE),
                         errmsg("value \"%s\" is out of range for 8-bit integer", s)));
            break;
        default:
            elog(ERROR, "unsupported result size: %d", size);
    }

    /*
     * Skip any trailing whitespace; if anything but whitespace remains before
     * the terminating character, bail out
     */
    while (*badp && *badp != c && isspace((unsigned char) *badp))
        badp++;

    if (*badp && *badp != c)
        ereport(ERROR,
                (errcode(ERRCODE_INVALID_TEXT_REPRESENTATION),
                 errmsg("invalid input syntax for %s: \"%s\"",
                        "integer", s)));

    return (int32) l;
}

/*
 * pg_itoa: converts a signed 16-bit integer to its string representation
 *
 * Caller must ensure that 'a' points to enough memory to hold the result
 * (at least 7 bytes, counting a leading sign and trailing NUL).
 *
 * It doesn't seem worth implementing this separately.
 */
void
pg_itoa(int16 i, char *a)
{
    pg_ltoa((int32) i, a);
}

/*
 * pg_ltoa: converts a signed 32-bit integer to its string representation
 *
 * Caller must ensure that 'a' points to enough memory to hold the result
 * (at least 12 bytes, counting a leading sign and trailing NUL).
 */
void
pg_ltoa(int32 value, char *a)
{
    char       *start = a;
    bool        neg = false;

    /*
     * Avoid problems with the most negative integer not being representable
     * as a positive integer.
     */
    if (value == PG_INT32_MIN)
    {
        memcpy(a, "-2147483648", 12);
        return;
    }
    else if (value < 0)
    {
        value = -value;
        neg = true;
    }

    /* Compute the result string backwards. */
    do
    {
        int32        remainder;
        int32        oldval = value;

        value /= 10;
        remainder = oldval - value * 10;
        *a++ = '0' + remainder;
    } while (value != 0);

    if (neg)
        *a++ = '-';

    /* Add trailing NUL byte, and back up 'a' to the last character. */
    *a-- = '\0';

    /* Reverse string. */
    while (start < a)
    {
        char        swap = *start;

        *start++ = *a;
        *a-- = swap;
    }
}

/*
 * pg_lltoa: convert a signed 64-bit integer to its string representation
 *
 * Caller must ensure that 'a' points to enough memory to hold the result
 * (at least MAXINT8LEN+1 bytes, counting a leading sign and trailing NUL).
 */
void
pg_lltoa(int64 value, char *a)
{
    char       *start = a;
    bool        neg = false;

    /*
     * Avoid problems with the most negative integer not being representable
     * as a positive integer.
     */
    if (value == PG_INT64_MIN)
    {
        memcpy(a, "-9223372036854775808", 21);
        return;
    }
    else if (value < 0)
    {
        value = -value;
        neg = true;
    }

    /* Compute the result string backwards. */
    do
    {
        int64        remainder;
        int64        oldval = value;

        value /= 10;
        remainder = oldval - value * 10;
        *a++ = '0' + remainder;
    } while (value != 0);

    if (neg)
        *a++ = '-';

    /* Add trailing NUL byte, and back up 'a' to the last character. */
    *a-- = '\0';

    /* Reverse string. */
    while (start < a)
    {
        char        swap = *start;

        *start++ = *a;
        *a-- = swap;
    }
}


/*
 * pg_ltostr_zeropad
 *        Converts 'value' into a decimal string representation stored at 'str'.
 *        'minwidth' specifies the minimum width of the result; any extra space
 *        is filled up by prefixing the number with zeros.
 *
 * Returns the ending address of the string result (the last character written
 * plus 1).  Note that no NUL terminator is written.
 *
 * The intended use-case for this function is to build strings that contain
 * multiple individual numbers, for example:
 *
 *    str = pg_ltostr_zeropad(str, hours, 2);
 *    *str++ = ':';
 *    str = pg_ltostr_zeropad(str, mins, 2);
 *    *str++ = ':';
 *    str = pg_ltostr_zeropad(str, secs, 2);
 *    *str = '\0';
 *
 * Note: Caller must ensure that 'str' points to enough memory to hold the
 * result.
 */
char *
pg_ltostr_zeropad(char *str, int32 value, int32 minwidth)
{
    char       *start = str;
    char       *end = &str[minwidth];
    int32        num = value;

    Assert(minwidth > 0);

    /*
     * Handle negative numbers in a special way.  We can't just write a '-'
     * prefix and reverse the sign as that would overflow for INT32_MIN.
     */
    if (num < 0)
    {
        *start++ = '-';
        minwidth--;

        /*
         * Build the number starting at the last digit.  Here remainder will
         * be a negative number, so we must reverse the sign before adding '0'
         * in order to get the correct ASCII digit.
         */
        while (minwidth--)
        {
            int32        oldval = num;
            int32        remainder;

            num /= 10;
            remainder = oldval - num * 10;
            start[minwidth] = '0' - remainder;
        }
    }
    else
    {
        /* Build the number starting at the last digit */
        while (minwidth--)
        {
            int32        oldval = num;
            int32        remainder;

            num /= 10;
            remainder = oldval - num * 10;
            start[minwidth] = '0' + remainder;
        }
    }

    /*
     * If minwidth was not high enough to fit the number then num won't have
     * been divided down to zero.  We punt the problem to pg_ltostr(), which
     * will generate a correct answer in the minimum valid width.
     */
    if (num != 0)
        return pg_ltostr(str, value);

    /* Otherwise, return last output character + 1 */
    return end;
}

/*
 * pg_ltostr
 *        Converts 'value' into a decimal string representation stored at 'str'.
 *
 * Returns the ending address of the string result (the last character written
 * plus 1).  Note that no NUL terminator is written.
 *
 * The intended use-case for this function is to build strings that contain
 * multiple individual numbers, for example:
 *
 *    str = pg_ltostr(str, a);
 *    *str++ = ' ';
 *    str = pg_ltostr(str, b);
 *    *str = '\0';
 *
 * Note: Caller must ensure that 'str' points to enough memory to hold the
 * result.
 */
char *
pg_ltostr(char *str, int32 value)
{
    char       *start;
    char       *end;

    /*
     * Handle negative numbers in a special way.  We can't just write a '-'
     * prefix and reverse the sign as that would overflow for INT32_MIN.
     */
    if (value < 0)
    {
        *str++ = '-';

        /* Mark the position we must reverse the string from. */
        start = str;

        /* Compute the result string backwards. */
        do
        {
            int32        oldval = value;
            int32        remainder;

            value /= 10;
            remainder = oldval - value * 10;
            /* As above, we expect remainder to be negative. */
            *str++ = '0' - remainder;
        } while (value != 0);
    }
    else
    {
        /* Mark the position we must reverse the string from. */
        start = str;

        /* Compute the result string backwards. */
        do
        {
            int32        oldval = value;
            int32        remainder;

            value /= 10;
            remainder = oldval - value * 10;
            *str++ = '0' + remainder;
        } while (value != 0);
    }

    /* Remember the end+1 and back up 'str' to the last character. */
    end = str--;

    /* Reverse string. */
    while (start < str)
    {
        char        swap = *start;

        *start++ = *str;
        *str-- = swap;
    }

    return end;
}

/*
 * pg_strtouint64
 *        Converts 'str' into an unsigned 64-bit integer.
 *
 * This has the identical API to strtoul(3), except that it will handle
 * 64-bit ints even where "long" is narrower than that.
 *
 * For the moment it seems sufficient to assume that the platform has
 * such a function somewhere; let's not roll our own.
 */
uint64
pg_strtouint64(const char *str, char **endptr, int base)
{
#ifdef _MSC_VER                    /* MSVC only */
    return _strtoui64(str, endptr, base);
#elif defined(HAVE_STRTOULL) && SIZEOF_LONG < 8
    return strtoull(str, endptr, base);
#else
    return strtoul(str, endptr, base);
#endif
}
